XARK 3.0

Xark began as a group blog in June 2005 but continues today as founder Dan Conover's primary blog-home. Posts by longtime Xark authors Janet Edens and John Sloop may also appear alongside Dan's here from time to time, depending on whatever.

Statcounter has my back

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Obama needs to hear from us

To put things in Army vernacular, Obama stepped on his dick last week. And no, I'm not talking about his reversal on fund-raising, which was hypocritical but tactical.

No, I'm talking about the FISA bill. It was Obama's first true test as the leader of both a party and a movement, and let's be blunt: He flunked it. Badly.

The Democratic Party is a decidedly mediocre commodity, and though I am
a Democrat myself I have no illusion that my party -- as an institution
-- is somehow immune to the corruption that so bedevils today's GOP.

In 2006 I was willing to accept a certain amount of hypocrisy and
corruption from my Democratic candidates: Democrats simply had to win
the mid-terms to prevent a Constitutional crisis. But two things have
changed since then:

The Bush administration is a dead bee: It can't move, but it's still got a sting;

A coalition of interests OUTSIDE OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY'S INNER
CIRCLE combined forces to nominate a dark horse candidate (and no,
that's not a "black" pun) who was strong on ethics reform.

Obama is a once-in-a-lifetime candidate, but what excites me most about
Obama are the qualities I see in his supporters. Yes, his campaign has
been managed skillfully, but skillful management doesn't win you
principled, committed, energetic supporters: It simply qualifies you to
receive them.

Obama's supporters are the people from the center-left who understand
that the whole system -- not just the Republican side of it -- has been
corrupted. They flocked to Obama because he offered a message very
similar to Larry Lessig's CHANGE CONGRESS talk: A corrupt government
is like an alcoholic father. Though an alcoholic has more pressing issues
(unemployment, divorce, homelessness) , until
he fixes his addiction problem, nothing else can get better.

Whatever his personal qualities, it's important to remember that Barack Obama is just a man, subject to all the frailties to which our species is heir. As president he will face not just opposition from other men, but from historic forces. If he has no source but the office of the presidency from which to draw power, then Obama's legacy will be one of bitter disappointment.

But Obama does have an another source of power: The people who carried him this far. If he draws on that source -- the vast, untapped reserves of good will and optimism within the hearts of the Americans who made his candidacy viable -- then Obama will have the power to do amazing things. Because we'll fight beside him so long as he is fighting the good fight.

Only here's the rub: You can't bottle that power, and you can't use it for leverage in corrupt compromises.

I'm voting for Obama, but what I'm really voting for is our movement. If he continues to abandon us as he did on the FISA bill last week -- supporting a corrupt compromise that pisses all over the values he has espoused on the campaign trail -- then all the energy that made him so strong this spring will simply dissipate.

It deeply disturbs me that Barack Obama has voiced tentative support
of HR 6304, the so-called "FISA compromise." I need Senator Obama to
explain exactly why FISA, alone, is no longer sufficient to gather
vital intelligence prior to his vote next week in the Senate on this
legislation.

I hope the Senator will hold to his word, and filibuster ANY such bill
that includes retroactive amnesty for acts by telecommunications firms
that they should have been well aware were illegal, and violative of
Americans' civil rights. The point is not to prosecute these
companies, but to leverage future cooperation from them in discovering
what exactly the Bush administration asked them to do without any
oversight from the judiciary or the Congress. Giving blanket immunity
could bury these facts from the American people for good, and that
would be completely unacceptable.

I sent Chris Dodd $25 the last time he held the line on this
dispicable legislation. I vow now that all my future donations for
this campaign depend on Senator Obama's actions this coming week.